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Showing results for bacchant. Search instead for baccha.
Definitions

bacchant

[bak-uhnt, buh-kant, -kahnt] / ˈbæk ənt, bəˈkænt, -ˈkɑnt /


Example Sentences

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Everyone who has ever seen a Jack Lemmon movie will instantly surmise that the model account exec is a three-button bacchant, and so he is.

From Time Magazine Archive

They also show off by picking up guitars and microphones and dancing like prairie bacchantes.

From New York Times Apr. 8, 2019

The tension is not in the contest but in the axiomatic revelation uttered by the chorus of the bacchantes: "Knowledge is not wisdom."

From Time Magazine Archive

Between acanthus leaves and flowers In the white marble gaily went Loves and bacchantes all the hours, Dancing about the monument.

From Enamels and Cameos and other Poems by Lee, Agnes

I have posed for nearly an hour upon one foot with extended arms in a dance of bacchantes, till I have fainted.

From Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, Volume 22. July, 1878. by Various

Why, here is material, thought King, for a troupe of bacchantes, lighthearted leaders of a summer festival.

From Their Pilgrimage by Warner, Charles Dudley

In their other religious festivals also, choruses of fauns and bacchants chaunted songs and held up individuals to public ridicule.

From The Mirror of Taste, and Dramatic Censor Vol I, No. 2, February 1810 by Carpenter, S. C. (Stephen Cullen)

The influence, direct and indirect, of these German philosophers reached far beyond the narrow circle of the bacchants or even the wandbearers of idealism.

From The Idea of Progress An inguiry into its origin and growth by Bury, J. B. (John Bagnell)

He painted all sorts of subjects, but was seen at his best in mythological scenes with groups of drunken satyrs and bacchants, surrounded by a close-placed landscape.

From A Text-Book of the History of Painting by Van Dyke, John Charles




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